Dewilde, 50, recounts the terror in black and white, depicting the jihadists as skeletons with deathly white faces. The book, which also includes 22 pages of eyewitness accounts, is due out in France, Belgium and Switzerland on Friday.

In the Bataclan, a Friday night crowd had been enjoying a gig by Californian band Eagles of Death Metal when the shooting began.

"We are no more than a teeming mass of the living, the injured, the dead, a mass of fear, screaming in terror," Dewilde writes of that moment.

(AFP)

He finds himself lying on the floor near a corpse. "I take stock of what we are experiencing. I am still alive," he writes. "A living being among the dead."

Beside him is Elisa, a young woman who has been injured. "She could have been my daughter," Dewilde writes. In low voices the strangers try to comfort each other.

Even in the Bataclan, Dewilde remembers, he somehow managed to whisper jokes to Elisa.

Writing the book was also cathartic, he notes. "By chance, I finished the drawings on Friday, May 13. Six months later, to the day."

He insists he feels no hatred over what happened and has stressed that ordinary Muslims must not be blamed for the series of jihadist attacks that have rocked France since January 2015.

People must not "descend into fear of the crowd, of non-whites, of the other," Dewilde wrote in an afterword following July's truck attack, when a jihadist mowed down 86 people in a crowd celebrating Bastille Day on the seafront in southern Nice.

"The enemy has no colour and no religion. The enemy is fanaticism, it's fear, it's the madness that leads to war."

The Bataclan is planning a defiant return to concerts next month, when France will mark a year since the Paris attacks.